I've been quite busy since I moved out of CFZ HQ almost a
year ago, but this last week has been my busiest yet. It started with me
getting engaged, continued with me registering my new business with the revenue,
writing and planning out the route for my first event, a tour of the Strange
History of Plymouth, and will culminate in me presenting the first of my tours
at 4pm this Saturday ( 6th of October 2012).
The “Strange History of Plymouth Tour” is a fantastic fifty
minute foray into Plymouth's paranormal past, that will leave at 2pm & 3pm
from the Shrimp sculpture near the Mayflower Steps every Saturday from the 13th
of October, with a special 'première' tour (with £1 off the normal price) at
4pm on the 6th of Oll's Magical Mystery Tour: The Giants of Plymouth
I've been quite busy since I moved out of CFZ HQ almost a
year ago, but this last week has been my busiest yet. It started with me
getting engaged, continued with me registering my new business with the revenue,
writing and planning out the route for my first event, a tour of the Strange
History of Plymouth, and will culminate in me presenting the first of my tours
at 4pm this Saturday ( 6th of October. Normal price is only £6 and
quite frankly you'd be mad to miss out. See my company's facebook page for more
information: https://www.facebook.com/BlackCatPlanning
Up until the 18th century there were two large
and ancient giants carved into the earth of Plymouth Hoe, similar to the Cerne
Abbas giant or the Uffington White Horse, the larger of which was known as
Gogmagot.
Gog and Magog are the names given to two giants found in
Hebrew folklore. The giants appear in the books of Ezekiel and Revelations in
the Bible as representatives of a powerful nation to the North of Israel that
would oppose it.
The giant Gogmagot in English folklore is probably unrelated
to the Giants of the Hebrew folklore as it is thought rather than being named
after the pair of Hebrew Giants his name was a corruption of Gawr Maddoc which
means Maddoc the great, when translated from Cornish or Welsh, so he was
probably a well respected or strong local king.
The story of Gogmagot, was that when settling Britain the
Trojan heroes Brutus and Corineus met with little resistance apart from a tribe
of giants in the South West. One day while having dinner at their camp on the
Hoe these giants attacked Brutus' party and led to a scene of carnage resulting
in the deaths of many on each side. Gogmagot was the strongest of the giants
and found himself facing off against Corineus himself. After a heated battle
the giant was able to shatter three of Corineus' ribs. The battle looked won
for Gogmagot but in a fit of rage the wounded Corineus ran towards the giant
and lifted him aloft using a superhuman strength throwing his foe to the rocks
below. Gogmagot's body shattered and tore on the jaged stones killing him and
body was washed out to sea.
In commemoration of this event the people were said to have
carved the figure of a giant into the thin layer of earth on the hoe, measuring
12 cubits in length.
The story of Brutus' founding of Britain was just a legend,
but it is known that there was a huge carving of a giant on Plymouth Hoe called
Gogmagot as far back as 1496 and were probably there a great deal longer as the
original source notes it had been cleared of weeds by the people of Plymouth
for many generations.
Although the original source doesn't explicitly mention a
second smaller figure that is meant to represent Corineus there were definitely
two figures carved on the Hoe by 1606.
One of the figures was, according to local legend, carved
where the citadel stands now, but the location of the second figure has been
lost to time and would have been covered over by landscaping between the 18th
and 19th centuries.
When the foundations of the citadel were being built and the
carved giant obliterated, it is said that the builders found a huge human
jawbone buried under it. Maybe the giants had originally been carved as a
monument to a great warrior or king from Devon and the legend was created by
people who saw the carved pictures after the warrior or king himself was no
longer remembered.
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